Appeals Court Tells ASCAP: A Download Is Not A Performance

By Mike Masnick, Techdirt.September 28, 2010 at 06:04PM

A few years back, we covered the legal fight pitting ASCAP against Yahoo and RealNetworks, where the two internet companies were told to pay up based on a ridiculously arbitrary fee formula, including a totally made up multiplier called the “music-use-adjustment-fraction.” The really scary part was that it calculated the revenue based on all of Yahoo’s revenue. So, yes, even though Yahoo makes most of its revenue in ways that have nothing to do with music, its total revenue is used as part of the calculation. The one good thing that came out of the legal fight was the court making it clear to ASCAP that a download is not a performance, which requires a separate fee. As you may recall, ASCAP has been trying to claim just about anything involving music is a “public performance,” in a weak attempt to get more cash.

Both sides appealed. Yahoo and RealNetworks appealed the crazy fee formula, and ASCAP appealed the claim that a download was not a public performance. The Second Circuit appeals court has now ruled and gone against ASCAP on both issues. It reaffirmed that a download is not a public performance (and thus, performance rights fees are not applicable) and rejected the bizarre calculation method used, as not “adequately supported” as being reasonable.


A few highlights:


The fact that the statute defines performance in the audio-visual context as “show[ing]” the work or making it “audible” reinforces the conclusion that “to perform” a musical work entails contemporaneous perceptibility. ASCAP has provided no reason, and we can surmise none, why the statute would require a contemporaneously perceptible event in the context of an audio-visual work, but not in the context of a musical work.

The downloads at issue in this appeal are not musical performances that are contemporaneously perceived by the listener. They are simply transfers of electronic files containing digital copies from an on-line server to a local hard drive. The downloaded songs are not performed in any perceptible manner during the transfers; the user must take some further action to play the songs after they are downloaded. Because the electronic download itself involves no recitation, rendering, or playing of the musical work encoded in the digital transmission, we hold that such a download is not a performance of that work….

The court also scolds ASCAP for blatantly misreading other opinions on what constitutes a public performance and points out that ASCAP appears to “misread the definition of ‘publicly,'” noting that ASCAP’s definition of a public performance seems to “render superfluous” the term “a performance” in the Copyright Act. Ouch.

As for the royalty fees, the court is pretty clear that it doesn’t buy the formula being used:


First, the district court did not adequately support the reasonableness of its method for measuring the value of the Internet Companies’ music use. Second, the district court did not adequately support the reasonableness of the 2.5% royalty rate applied to the value of the Internet Companies’ music use.

In other words, you don’t just get to make up numbers out of nowhere.

That said, the court does say that it isn’t necessarily against using such a “music-use-adjustment-fraction,” it just needs the number to actually be supported. This is unfortunate, as it leads to improperly using non-music revenue as part of the calculation for how much should be paid for the music license. However, the court tries to deal with this by saying that the reasonable support needed would justify what the multiplier factor would be. Its main concern with the lower court’s ruling was that it didn’t take this into account and used a measure that made little sense (time spent listening to streams) which had little bearing on ad revenue:


The district court’s MUAF accounts for the value of Yahoo!’s music use by using the amount of time that music is streamed. Streaming time, however, neither drives nor correlates with Yahoo!’s advertising revenue. The record evidence makes plain that Yahoo!’s advertising revenue model more accurately correlates with the number of times a particular page is accessed by users than to the duration of streaming time.

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8 Websites To Get The Inside Scoop On Comic Book Movies

By Saikat Basu, MakeUseOfSeptember 28, 2010 at 03:31PM

comic book moviesMovie producers know a good thing when they see one. There’s nothing that fires up a fanboy’s interest more than to see his (or her) favorite superhero come alive as a comic book movie on the big screen. Put an A-List celebrity in a spandex suit and you have a sure fire hit on your hands.

Okay, it’s not that simple. There have been terrific duds like Watchmen and Hulk (the 2003 one). And I am not putting spoofs like ‘Superhero Movie’ on the Golden Raspberry worthy list.

Whatever the final outcome, films based on superheroes are eagerly anticipated. Whole fan sites come up around sneak peeks and inside scoops. Just check out the rave that’s around the next Batman or Spiderman movie.


Where should a superhero fan go to check out the next big thing in a cape and hope to see it fly out of the screen? Maybe these eight websites can help him or her get the scoop on comic book movies.

Superhero Hype

comic book movies

Captain America is in Liverpool. He is going to be in an upcoming movie on the Marvel Universe. Catch the set and costume photos here on this site along with a lot of other news around superheroes and comic books. The site can be browsed according to the superheroes you are a fan of. You can jump into the forum and a sub-forum talking about your kind of crusader and chitchat with likeminded fans or gawk at the photos in the gallery.

Comic Book Movie

comic book superhero movies

Captain America is the talk of the town. That’s what I learned from ComicBookMovie.com. The site comes up with breaking news on mainstream movies starring your favorite superhero. The site also covers sci-fi, fantasy, video games, animation, anime and horror genres. The site has an active discussion board, but if you are a true blue fan, you should set up your own fansite. The site has a huge lineup of user created fansites. To get after your interest, the site also holds occasional fun contests and sweepstakes.

Comic Book Resources

comic book superhero movies

This site covers all angles and lives up to its name of being a great resource for fans of comic books and superhero movie adaptations. Features are the blogs that look into the niches of comic books and also movies/TV shows based on them.

For instance, the Spinoff Online blog has thoughts on What Is the Best Superhero Movie Ever with a poll. The Comics Should Be Good blog is on history, trivia and contests. Also check out the CBR Events Calendar for upcoming comic book events.

Mania

comic book superhero movies

Mania.com is all about giving comic book, anime, movie fans with news and feature stories. Features like Behind the Scenes, Profiles & Interviews, A View from the Aisles, are for the fan who loves to go deep. I for one loved the articles 6 Superheroes Who Completely Lost Their Shit sourced from Cracked.com in the Weekly Cracked List archive.

Splash Page (MTV)

This is a MTV blog that talks about ‘comic inspired flicks’. You can get a lot of inside scoop here on the next big thing that’s around the corner. News items sourced from other sources get bytes. Fans will love the exclusive tidbits and star interviews done in the usual MTV style.

Newsarama

The more than a decade old site is all about comic books. With film adaptations coming in thick and fast, it’s also now a lot about the silver screen and the idiot box. Catch the latest headlines via the news features or the community discussions. The site also has a video channel that you can check out for trailers, teasers, and talks.

eFavata’s Comic Book Movies

The movie and film blog is worth a look for the way it covers nothing but comic book movies. Of course, it sources some of the breaking news from the sites we have covered earlier, but it is interesting in the way it distills the news from the other websites. Catch the list of upcoming comic book movies on the left column. The image galleries are worth a dekko too.

Marvel

comic book movies

The Marvel universe is huge with a great lineup of super heroes and villains. There are a lot of movies planned on them too. So why not get the straight dope from the horse’s mouth? There’s an entire section on movies and TV. Each released, upcoming, or released movie gets a page of its own with news, photos, and other tiny details like comic book links. Don’t overlook the tiny grey arrows to expand the selections and sideswipe the view.

Movies based on comic book superheroes have made comics cool again. Importantly, it has given the adult the chance to relive his mind dramas on the large screen.

What’s your rating on the fan meter? Do you like movies that have been churned out on superheroes or did you prefer them in the comics? Also, let us know if you know of any other cinematic website that’s based on the guys ‘n gals with the special powers and higher purposes.

Image Credit: Shutterstock


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Eight Species of Patent Strategy – Part 2 Five levels of IP management and how intellectual property management develops from stage 1 to stage 2

By Bill Meade, Ph.D., Basicip's BlogSeptember 28, 2010 at 02:01PM

Part 1, Part 3

Introduction:

In part 1 of this article series on patent strategy we derived eight species of strategy from the steps a successful/profitable patent goes through over its lifetime.  In part 2 (this article) we are going to use the eight species framework to illustrate how intellectual property management evolves through five phases over the life cycle of a successful company.  In this article, we’ll review the basic framework from part 1, and then describe how IP business processes help us develop an IP management maturity taxonomy.  Then, level 1 “boot up” and level 2 “managed” IP maturity levels will be described in terms of business processes used for each IP management function.

Framework Review:

For a full description of each species of patent strategy, refer to yesterday’s post.  Figure 1 displays the framework and Table 1 has vignette length explanations of each strategy species.

 

TheBigVenn01.pptx.jpg

Figure 1: The Eight Species of IP Management Business Processes

TheBigVenn01.pptx-8.jpg

Table 1: Short Definitions of Each IP Management Business Process Type

 

Levels of IP Management:

Carnegie Mellon has since 1984 worked to measure the maturity of software organizations.  This research began at the request of the US Department of Defense as software projects proved to be strategic bottlenecks in getting high-quality defense systems completed on time and within budget.  Figure 3 and Table 2 display the characteristics of organizations as they range from level 1 to level 5 in software management maturity.  The big change across the 5 levels, is how process improvement changes.  In level 1 organization, there is no process improvement, because there are no processes.  In level 5 organization process improvement has become a coequal function to the actual software specification, development, and test.

CMMILEVELS.JPG

Figure 3: CMMI Maturity Level Characteristics
Source: Wikipedia

Capability_Maturity_Model.jpg (720×540).jpg

Table 2: Capability Maturity Model Process View of Model
Source: Wikipedia

IP management is a complex, multidisciplinary, knowledge-based process, just like defense system software development.   Individuals working in IP management, like individuals working in defense software development, are unlikely to know about the existence of maturity levels.  At lower levels of maturity in both software and IP management systems, short-run individual behavior is largely determined by the system.  As IP management maturity increases, latitude for long-term initiative and individual autonomy open up.  Reactive behavior, is largely, predictable behavior.

We believe the eight species of IP management strategy help in understanding the five levels of IP management maturity.  In the sections that follow, we describe the business processes characteristic for each type of IP management strategy for each level of IP management.

Intellectual Property Management in Startups:

When you read about startups, in say Jessica Livingston’s excellent FOUNDERS AT WORK you quickly realize that there are important problems specific to startups, and intellectual property is not one of them.  Picking good partners, finding funding, using better tools, selling, all of these are critical in startups.  But, intellectual property is not, and in many ways, can not be important.

IP is not important because startups think in terms of break even and number of payrolls that they can cover with current assets.  Optimizing a startup by capturing and managing IP as an ongoing business process is like asking a 16 year old to invest in an annuity that will mature in 600 years.  While it may be profitable, there just isn’t any way to do this within the 16 year old’s mental framework.  Like the 16 year old, people sweating firmware, releases, products, and sales, do not have the emotional space and intellect to invest in a patent that might issue in 5 years and might be licensable in 15 years.

We think the big reason that isn’t important to startups, is that the first job of every startup is to pivot its business model until it generates product market fit.  Before a startup has a product market fit, all it has is prototypes and hypotheses.  If patents are files on prototypes and the markets they are hypothesized to fit, they are likely to be wasted.  Startups have to pivot their business models over and over before they find markets.  Reading books on high tech marketing by Guy Kawasaki, Geoffrey Moore, and Steve Blank have lead us to the conclusion that  more certain management is that it knows how a high tech market will evolve, the more likely it is to be wrong.

And while patent attorneys are only too eager to write patent applications on any novel, useful, non-obvious technology, and they are eager to get started on drafting patents as soon as possible, the fact remains that patents are not worth having if they don’t protect product market fit that a startup ends up with before growing.  Protection of early prototypes and hypothesized markets is worthless.  And most startups consequently, ignore IP.  Example: We’ve known Guy Kawasaki for 20 years, and we have never been able to get him excited about intellectual property management for his startups.

So, the standard starting point in an electronics startup company is displayed in Figure 3.  That is, no IP business model, no profitable IP targets, no capture, no triage, no prep and process, no portfolio management, no litigation until they are successful, no monetization strategy.  In a startup’s beginning, there is no IP management.

Figure 3: Level One “Boot Up” IP Management Maturity

Table 2 displays the business process to IP strategy matchup of a startup pre-success.  The startup is sweating finding a product market fit, until that fit is found, there isn’t any equity for a patent troll or other patent holder to siphon from a startup.  So, most startups coast without intellectual property management until they hit a level of success that becomes widely visible.

TheBigVenn01.pptx-4.jpg

 

Table 2: Pre-Litigation-Event IP Business Process to Strategy Species

Take for example, VIZIO the TV company.  They started in 2003 and did not attract litigation until 2006 when they were selling more than US$500,000,000 a year of products.  Look at Figure 4 and guess how many patent applications VIZIO filed in 2003, 2004, and 2005.

 

IPManagementAnalyticalFrameworks.pptx.jpg

Figure 4: VIZIO Sales (red) Patent Litigation (blue) and Patents (green)

Figure 5 shows that the first patent application on record for VIZIO was a design patent filed in October of 2006.  This is not proof that startups ignore intellectual property.  It is just an example of one startup and its experience with intellectual property.

(((((VIZIO) <in> PA) ) AND (PD>=2003-01-01 ) ) AND (PD<=2008-12-31 )).jpg

Figure 5: Visio Patenting Activity 2003-2008
Source: Delphion

But everything about intellectual property management changes for the startup once it becomes a sales success and it experiences its first patent infringement lawsuit.  For VIZIO the first suit hit in 2006 (blue bar in Figure 4). The startup company finds out that it has been sued, and needs to hire a general counsel, change legal firm or add a patent litigation literate firm to existing transactions counsel, just to have an “at bat” experience in its patent litigation.

Startup companies have no IP business processes and are reactive to IP crises.  Table 3 displays the state of IP management business processes immediately after a successful small company has been sued.  While before litigation, all eight species of IP business strategy were being ignored, immediately after litigation initiation, two business processes begin to receive management attention: Litigation and Prep and Process.

TheBigVenn01.pptx-3.jpg

Table 3: Post-Litigation-Event IP Business Process to Strategy Species

As ugly as litigation/licensing is, it is the gateway event to put an IP management program in place.  It is a gateway because litigation is so astronomically expensive.   For a big electronics company the cost is often $1,000,000 per month. These kind of costs create an instant management justification for the successful startup to begin to manage intellectual property.

A managerial light goes on and the founders of the company realize fully for the first time, that patents can prevent other companies from suing.  Because suits are so costly, preventing litigation with patents, is … valuable!  Litigation/licensing then moves IP management being nice “in theory” and stuck in a level 1: Boot Up, to a “business expense” that gets to level 2: “Managed” (see Figure 6).

EightSpeciesManaged.jpg

Figure 6: Level Two “Managed” IP Management Maturity

In this article in this series on eight species of patent strategy we have covered the basic framework, and then the idea of five levels of IP management existing through an analogy with software management and CMMI work at Carnegie Mellon.  The reason to bring in the idea of IP management maturity and five levels of maturity was to illustrate how the eight species of patent strategy are helpful for characterizing IP management.

Every IP program manages eight species of patent strategy.  And they manage these with business processes.  Initially the business processes used by startups (Level 1: Boot Up) are to ignore all eight species of patent strategy.  But when startups become successful they attract licensing programs, and litigation by patent trolls as well as legitimate patent-holding businesses.

Make it Personal:

By now, you are beginning to see the eight different kinds of patent strategy.  How these kinds of patent strategy can be extended to IP strategy in general.  And how each of these kinds of patent strategy are instantiated in business processes.  Now you can apply this framework to the IP management in your company.  What are the business processes your company uses to define its IP business model?  Does your company ignore IP business model?  Is your company in “boot up” mode or are you in “managed” mode with prep and process and litigation departments in your legal department?

In Part 3 of this series, we will work through the business processes that companies develop in level 3 “defined” and level 4 “closed-loop” IP management maturity, and finally level 5 “profit maximizing” IP Management.

The true story behind the amazing Minecraft Enterprise-D

By bkuchera@arstechnica.com (Ben Kuchera), Ars TechnicaSeptember 28, 2010 at 01:55PM


There is a Minecraft video making its way around the Internet. In it, you see the side of a wall, and hear a man’s voice explaining your position at the bottom of a huge well. Then the camera turns and you see the immense body of the starship Enterprise, created using blocks in Minecraft. It’s breathtaking. “The D was ‘my Enterprise.’ It was the one I grew up watching on TV,” its creator, Joshua Walker, told Ars. It was always his dream to one day create a 1:1 scale model of the ship, and using the game he was finally able to realize that dream (albeit virtually).

Then Felicia Day tweeted about it, and the gaming blogs picked up the story. Now the video of that enormous ship is all over the Internet. Here’s how it was made.

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Why You Should Use Ad Block Extensions, Even if You Don’t Block Ads [Firefox Tip]

By Whitson Gordon, LifehackerSeptember 27, 2010 at 08:00PM

Why You Should Use Ad Block Extensions, Even if You Don't Block AdsWhether you block internet ads or not, ad-blocking extensions are pretty handy. Not only can you use them to block offensive material, rickrolls, and other unpleasant things, but reader Dave-Farquhar lets us know that they can also block malicious software.

Ads on the web can be all kinds of annoying, but some people prefer not to block every internet ad they see—after all, it is how most web sites (including Lifehacker) make their money, and are able to keep pumping out content for free. Even if you don’t block ads, though, it may be worthwhile to install an ad blocker (like Adblock Plus for Firefox), if only for its malware-blocking powers.

You won’t see it on the list of ad filters when you first install most ad-block extensions, but a few folks have created a filter that maintains a listing of domains used for spreading spyware and malware. It started out as a tool for DNS servers, but has since been converted to a filter so those using ad blockers can take advantage of (on Firefox or Chrome). Hit the link to read about it and subscribe to it, and don’t forget to install Adblock Plus on Firefox first if you haven’t already.

Eight Species of Patent Strategy – Part 1 the framework

By Bill Meade, Ph.D., Basicip's BlogSeptember 27, 2010 at 01:49PM

Introduction:

When invited to give a talk for an American Corporate Council Association (which changed its name to the Association of Corporate Council) in 2004 I was asked to speak on “patent strategy.”  When I complained “That is a pretty big topic, can you narrow it down a little for me?”  the answer was “No.  You are a great person to speak on patent strategy, just do the best you can with it.”

So, I invented an eight step analytical framework to make sense of all the kinds of patent strategies I had been involved in while the patent portfolio manager at HP, as well as an IP consultant with other clients.  Six years later, I am still using the same eight species of IP strategy in my IP consulting and teaching, and I’ve found that clients and students see this analytical framework, and then immediately snatch it out of my hands and apply it to their situations in order to frame their problems.

As we work through our first book from BasicIP’s consulting practice experience running 450 invention workshops around the world, I’ve found this framework to be indispensable to laying out a step by step argument about why IP programs need invention workshops.  The eight species framework has become the foundation on which new analytical frameworks are being built.  So, just to be sure this framework isn’t shot full of holes I’ve been tricking local law firms in Boise (Zarian Midgley Johnson, Hawley Troxel) former bosses, the IP manager training guru for the Licensing Executive Society, and even a local law school dean (Yes, Boise is getting its own law school!) into looking over this framework and seeing if they can see anything wrong with it.  So far, no problems.  So, the purpose of this blog post, is to work out the Eight Species IP framework in format that is a little more formal than the PowerPoint decks it has until now, called home.

The Framework:

Figure 1 displays the eight species of patent strategy.  I derived these eight steps from the steps that a successfully licensed patent follows in its life cycle.

TheBigVenn01.pptx.jpg

Figure 1

The steps a successfully licensed patent should follow over its life cycle are as follows:

  1. A defined business model.  Principle: If you don’t know how you are going to monetize a patent before you apply, you are never going to monetize that patent.  Beginning with the end in mind is a Steven Covey principle.  Beginning with a profitable end in mind is closer to a law of nature when it comes to patents.  Example patent strategies that come out of defining IP business models might be IBM’s shifting to a for-profit IP business model under Gerstner (see 149 in his excellent book W.S.E.C.D.) to justify investing in research.  Or, a startup that has been small but that is becoming larger, may need to change business model from “hiding in the shadows of an industry” (a great place for every small company to start) to “buying oligopoly membership” as it grows.
  2. Targeting profitable IP.  If the IP management team is not specifying what it wants inventors to invent, then it won’t get what it needs.  Typical engineering management is very busy, not that confident in its IP knowledge or strategy ideas, and so the tyranny of the urgent crowds out making a list.  Example targeting strategies related to patents while I was at HP was Steve Fox’s mantra of “future looking, competitively preemptive, and gap filling” inventions that were wanted. While these are great general goals for targeting IP, the wise CTO will take these goals one step further and specify specific technologies from them.  For example, while I was at HP Boise in Y2K, we continued to receive halftoning invention disclosures – by then an “old” technology.  And when halftoning disclosures were filed as patents they cost more, took longer, and ended up capturing less, than an equivalent investment of money and inventor time in a future-looking technology like internet printing.  So decommissioning halftoning as an invention disclosure target would be a second example of a patent targeting strategy.  For a great example of making patent targets specific, see Steve Fox’s chapter (11) in Patrick Sullivan’s PROFITING FROM INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL.
  3. Generate and capture IP.  Generating and capturing involves training and dragooning.  If you look at how inventors come up to speed in your organization, you will find that about half of them require writing four to six invention disclosures before you can tell how good an inventor they will be.  The other half writes great disclosures from the start.  Training involves how you reach the non-instant-on half of your employees and providing them with the deliberate practice necessary for them to come up to speed inventing.  The dragooning involves everyone.  You can dragoon people into inventing in an infinite number of ways: with a simple “IP strip-mining” exercise, with an intensive off site brainstorming exercise, or by telling them they don’t get their paychecks until they fill out 6 enabled invention disclosures.  Or, you can give away iPods randomly to people filling out invention disclosures.  Whatever strategy you choose will be better than not having a strategy to dragoon inventions from people.   If you don’t have a dragooning strategy, you will capture =log(of what you should be seeing).  Most patent attorneys in companies have complained about “not seeing enough” from their inventors.  But few strategically dragoon their inventors.  Get a training and dragooning strategy.  They work well together!
  4. IP triage is what happens after an invention disclosure has been turned in, but before it is acted on.  The default triage strategy in most IP organizations is to sit around a table and read the invention disclosures and then invent rules for how to disposition the disclosures.  Every quarter another meeting is held, the rules are reinvented from a new set of invention disclosures.  The process repeats four times a year.  An improved triage strategy includes developing four 1 to 10 rating scales that each disclosure is rated on, having two or three independent raters rate all the disclosures, and then automatically dispositioning the disclosures without group discussion if they fall below X or above Y.  Then, the group discussions can be focused on defining what each of the four ratings scales mean, and discussing disclosures that generate ratings variations.
  5. Prep and process.  This is the stuff of patent agents and attorneys.  Prep and process is one of two species of patent strategy where every IP department scores at least a B is in prep and process.  This is craft.  Quality.  Goodness to attorneys and patent agents. So, I don’t talk much about prep and process strategies.
  6. Portfolio management.  There are many kinds of patent strategies involved in portfolios.  For example, international patenting.  Nobody can afford to file in every country, so a natural patent portfolio management strategy is a factorial design of IP across countries to cut down patent costs but to maintain enough coverage to protect products internationally. Another portfolio management strategy example would be to build a strong portfolio in a specific area to feed a licensing program. Another might be to defensively publish heavily around big patents that are obtained to preempt other companies from capturing improvement patents.  Portfolio management strategies are truly legion.  But today, almost all the contact most IP organizations have with portfolios is in deciding on patent maintenance fees.
  7. Litigation.  A second “B or above” patent strategy area for every IP organization.  Please note that litigation is the only species of the eight kinds of patent strategy, taught in law school.  Also note, that none of the eight species of patent strategy are taught in business schools.  In fact, the eight species of patent strategy are something of a “no man’s land” where companies have to paste together business processes the best they can to cover.
  8. Monetization.  Deciding how you are going to make money with your patents is one thing.  Cashing checks from IP is another.  There needs to be a lot of feedback between monetization and IP business model.  Business models that are so heavenly minded that they are no earthly good need to be tested and refined into monetizable business models.  Checks will not come back to your company for IP unless you have a strategy on how you are going to monetize the IP.  Managers need their feet held to the fire.  Business processes need to be set up, run, fed, refined, and refactored.

The next post in this series will talk about how IP strategies evolve in the wild of the electronics industry starting with stage one where a growing company has no IP strategy (see Figure 2).

The Eight Species of IP Strategy Framework - Birth

Figure 2


11 Online Sources For The Best In Mac Freeware [Mac]

By Nancy Messieh, MakeUseOfSeptember 25, 2010 at 01:31PM

mac freewareAside from the well known resources for free Mac apps like Softpedia, cnet and of course Apple, there are some other great sites out there listing, reviewing and rating all of the Mac freeware available for download.

Whether you’re looking for games or applications, freeware, open source apps or abandonware, you’re bound to find what you need on one of these sites.

MacUpdate

MacUpdate lists both free and paid applications, but if you’re only in it for the free stuff, you can easily filter your search results to include free apps only. Updated on a daily basis, MacUpdate features only the best in Mac software, with all applications rated and reviewed before being added to the site.

mac freeware

AppDonkey

AppDonkey features a list of over 1,000 completely free Mac apps. Search for what you want or browse by category. AppDonkey makes it easy to download several apps at once by selecting all of the apps you want, and getting them onto your computer at the click of a button.

FreeMacApps

FreeMacApps features over 400 Mac freeware applications, with a very easy to navigate and clean appearance. Links on the site lead to the original sites, so you can’t download directly from FreeMacApps. Browse apps by category or perform a search to find exactly what you’re looking for.

FreeMacWare

FreeMacWare can seem a little unwieldy at first glance, but there’s a wealth of great Mac resources to be found in the site. The site is updated on a daily basis, with brief reviews accompanying a link to the software’s originating site and a download link. They also have a dashboard widget displaying the 10 latest additions to the site.

Bodega

Bodega is an app store of sorts for Mac software. Download the app to gain access to a world of great Mac apps, but if you’re looking only for free software, you’re going to have to filter through paid apps as well to find what you’re looking for. They do have a list of the top free apps, as well as the latest Mac software related posts on Mac blogs.

Download Free Mac Games

Download Free Mac Games is a great site to do just that – download free Mac games. Browse the list of games by category or simply take a look at everything that’s on offer.

Wikipedia

Wikipedia is usually a great source of lists of all kinds of software. And of course, Mac software is no exception. The list, divided into categories, is not limited to free apps only, so you’ll have to go through them one by one to find the free ones which is less than ideal, but the list is a greet way of finding software you never knew you needed.

Free Download a Day

Free Download a Day is not exclusively a Mac software site, featuring freeware for Windows and Linux as well. That said, it’s updated on a daily basis with great in-depth reviews, so it’s always good to keep an eye on it for new Mac apps.

Free Mac App a Day

Free Mac App a Day has undergone some changes and is now known as AppExhibit. The latest reviews on the site are of paid apps, but you can still access the entire archive of free app reviews that were posted before the revamp.

Open Source Mac

If you’re looking for Open Source software, the best place for Mac users is Open Source Mac. It may not be a very long list, but all of the applications listed are as free as they get. The apps are listed by category.

Macintosh Garden

Macintosh Garden is a unique Mac software repository. All of the applications listed have been abandoned. Don’t expect any updated software but rather, find some of your favorite classic games as well as a list of abandoned applications.

mac freeware

Where do you download free Mac apps? Let us know in the comments.


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